Smoking, e-cigs and reduced risk products Dr John Schoonbee, IMS November 2017
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The storyline smoking is bad yet many folks still smoke because quitting is very hard is it better, if one cannot quit, to use something less harmful? what are the options? (and what does it mean for us?) 3
Smoker/non smoker mortality ratios On average about 170% mortality compared to non smokers 4
Males >15yr smoking prevalence (WHO) 5
US cigarette smoking http://www.gallup.com/poll/109048/us-smoking-rate-still-coming-down.aspx 6
Percentage of smokers by age and sex, 2014 Source: Opinions and Lifestyle Survey - Office for National Statistics 7
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Stopping has benefits, even later in life 9
How does quitting (/switching) improve health? Stopping gains 4-10 yrs of life (age dependent) N Engl J Med 2013;368:341-50 10
How easy is it to quit? Two thirds want to quit, only 1 in 20 manage Options include cold turkey gum, patches medication (switching) http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2060414/want-quitsmoking-study-finds-6-cent-try-succeed---graduates-likely-kickhabit.html https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmc2376894 /pdf/0980317.pdf
Electronic Cigarettes 12
Introduction electronic nicotine-delivery system (ENDS) Electronic cigarettes, also known as e-cigarettes, are battery-operated products designed to deliver nicotine, flavor and other chemicals. They turn chemicals, including nicotine, into an aerosol (using an atomizer) that is inhaled by the user no smoke, no tobacco creates a vapour hence the term vaping 13
Different flavours of e cigarettes E Cigarettes : An evidence update : Public Health England 14
E-Cigarettes : current adult cigarette smokers in Great Britain (2010-2015) ASH Fact Sheet on the use of electronic cigarettes among adults in Great Britain May 2015 15
Prevalence of e-cigarette usage (US) Study comparing 2010 to 2013 Ever use : 1.8% to 13.0% Current use : 0.3% to 6.8% 2013 Current use: 18-24 14.2% 25-44 8.6% 45-64 5.5% 65+ 1.2% daily smokers 30.3% non daily smokers 34.1% former smokers 5.4% never smokers 1.4% Nicotine Tob Res (2014) doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntu213 16
E-cigarette Regulation Regulations differ in various markets nicotine and non nicotine containing may be different Only e-cigarettes that are marketed for therapeutic purposes are currently regulated by the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Currently, the FDA Center for Tobacco Products (CTP) regulates cigarettes, cigarette tobacco, roll-your-own tobacco, and smokeless tobacco Proposed newly deemed products would include electronic cigarettes, cigars, pipe tobacco, certain dissolvables that are not smokeless tobacco, gels, and waterpipe tobacco. 17
E-cigarette Regulation 18
E-cigarettes - are they harmful? e-cigarettes are about 95% safer than combustibles The concentration of nicotine in nicotine containing devices is however not standardised and the dose delivered is inconsistent the constituents of cigarette smoke that harm health including carcinogens are either absent in e-cigarette vapour or, if present, they are mostly at levels much below 5% of smoking doses (mostly below 1% and far below safety limits for occupational exposure) BMJ 2015;351:h4634 19
Is it safe? What about the aldehydes? Recent reports raised a possibility that under certain conditions, EC may release high levels of aldehydes (released in tobacco smoke and contribute to its toxicity) Aldehydes are also released with thermal degradation of propylene glycol and glycerol in e-liquids. Previous studies detected the presence of aldehydes, especially formaldehyde, in the vapour from some EC, but at levels much lower than in cigarette smoke. Across brands, EC released 1/50th of the level of formaldehyde released by cigarettes. The highest level detected was six times lower than the level in cigarette smoke. Normal vaping generated negligible aldehyde levels. (McRobbie, H., et al., Effects of the use of electronic cigarettes with and without concurrent smoking on acrolein delivery. 2014) Farsalinos, K. E Cig aerosol contains 6 x LESS formaldehyde than tobacco cigarette smoke. 2014, Farsalinos, C., E-cigarette aerosols generates high levels of formaldehyde only in 'dry puff' conditions. Addiction 20
E-cigarettes - Gateway to tobacco? CDC findings (2013 vs 2014) indicated that past 30-day use of EC increased among middle and high school students High school students use increased from 4.5% to 13.4% between 2013 and 2014. Middle school students, current EC use increased from 1.1% in 2013 to 3.9% in 2014. However, cigarette smoking had continued to decline during this period (high school students: 15.8% to 9.2%; middle school students: 4.7 % to 2.5%) such that smoking was at a 22-year low in the US. These findings strongly suggest that EC use is not encouraging uptake of cigarette smoking. Arrazola, R.A., et al., 2011-2014. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep, 2015. 64: p. 381-5. Dutra, L.M. and S.A. Glantz, JAMA pediatrics, 2014. 168(7): p. 610-617. Centre for Disease Control and Prevention. E cig use.2015 21
E-cigs haven t been shown to be effective There haven t been any scientific studies that prove e-cigs actually help people to quit smoking. There is also concern that using e-cigs may lead kids to start smoking regular cigarettes. The bottom line is that we just don t know enough about e-cigs, so we don t recommend that you use them. smokefree.gov 22
"Naomi 214.2 (12883884613)" by Alexander Russy - Naomi 214.2. Licensed under CC BY 2.0 via Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/file:naomi_214.2_(12883884613).jp g#/media/file:naomi_214.2_(12883884613).jpg Switching from smoking to vaping avoids most of the risks of smoking and smokers should be encouraged to do so. E-cigarettes currently are much more popular than other treatments and hence have much wider reach and potential for a major public health impact. Public Health England s position on e-cigarettes BMJ 2015;351:h4863 John Schoonbee Fitter with E Cigarettes? John Schoonbee ARMS, November Smoking, e-cig 2015and RRPs 23 IMS 2017 23
E-cigarettes do they help smokers quit or decrease use of tobacco cigarettes? Caponnetto P, et al. (2013) EffiCiency and Safety of an electronic cigarette (ECLAT) as Tobacco Cigarettes Substitute: A Prospective 12-Month Randomized Control Design Study. PLoS ONE 8(6): e66317. doi:10.1371 24
E-cigarettes - do they help smokers quit or decrease use of tobacco cigarettes? Caponnetto P, et al. (2013) EffiCiency and Safety of an electronic cigarette (ECLAT) as Tobacco Cigarettes Substitute: A Prospective 12-Month Randomized Control Design Study. PLoS ONE 8(6): e66317. doi:10.1371 25
E-cigarettes - Intensive e-cigarette users more likely to quit smoking Representative samples of adults in 2 US metropolitan areas were surveyed in 2011/2012 about their use of novel tobacco products. In 2014, follow-up interviews were conducted with 695 of the 1,374 baseline cigarette smokers who had agreed to be re-contacted (retention rate: 51%). The follow-up interview assessed their smoking status and history of electronic cigarette usage. Respondents were categorized as intensive users (used e-cigarettes daily for at least 1 month), intermittent users (used regularly, but not daily for more than 1 month), and non-users/triers (used e- cigarettes at most once or twice). Logistic regression controlling for demographics and tobacco dependence indicated that intensive users of e-cigarettes were 6 times more likely than non-users/triers to report that they quit smoking (OR: 6.07, 95% CI = 1.11, 33.2). Nicotine Tob Res. 2015 Feb;17(2):127-33 26
Reduced Risk Tobacco Products 27
Reduced Risk Tobacco Products 28
RRP Background Philip Morris International CEO has stated : no more combustible cigarettes by 2050 PMI has invested 3bn USD in developing a new reduced risk product (RRP) no combustion, only heating of tobacco to 300 C heat not burn The data shows risk reduction of >90% (compared to traditional cigarettes) They have launched in multiple markets Japan, Europe and UK - in Japan alone they have >10% of the smokers on RRPs Single digit % of smokers manage to give up, PMI have managed over 70% conversion in Japan (first market) This is the first of 4 different platforms they are developing, all reduced risk products. The second is in live city testing. 29
Reduction in metabolites, carcinogens equivalent to abstinence when smokers switch to RRP CC combustible cig THS RRP SA - abstinence 30
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Underwriting 32
What we have think about, assuming we believe an e-cig (only) user or RRP (only) user has a lower risk than traditional cigarette smoker How to test if someone still inhales nicotine? How sustainable is the switch? How absolute is the switch? Do we really know long term outcomes? Nicotine =?lifelong addiction How much lower is the risk?? 33
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